Seasonal & Holidays
Find Out What Is Open And Closed In North Andover And MA On Labor Day
The last weekend of summer is here. Find out what's open and closed nearby.
NORTH ANDOVER, MA — Summer is over, at least unofficially. The fall equinox isn't until Sept. 22, and it's still pretty hot out, but Labor Day signals the start of the new school year and the end of summer leisure.
As state residents head out on final summer vacations and host barbecues, it's important to know what will be open and closed in North Andover and throughout Massachusetts on Labor Day.
In North Andover, town buildings will be closed on Monday. The Stevens Memorial library also will be closed Monday, and will re-open at 10 a.m. Tuesday.
Find out what's happening in North Andoverfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
Additionally, trash and recycling collection in town will take place on a one-day delay all of next week. For example, the trash and recycling normally collected on Monday will be picked up on Tuesday. This will continue through Saturday, Sept. 10.
Here is a list of places that traditionally are open, and ones traditionally closed, in Massachusetts on Labor Day:
Find out what's happening in North Andoverfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
- Retail stores: Typically open
- Liquor stores: Allowed to open in Massachusetts
- Supermarkets: Open
- Convenience stores: OpenRestaurants, bars: Open
- Banks: Closed
- Libraries: Closed
- Stock market: Closed
- Municipal, state, federal offices: Closed
- Mail: Post offices closed; express delivery only
- MBTA: Subways and buses on Sunday schedule; commuter rail on weekend schedule
- Orange Line: Still closed!
A quick history of Labor Day
The first Labor Day holiday was celebrated in 1882, with a parade in New York City, but the question of who first proposed the idea of a holiday to honor workers is in dispute more than a century later.
Congress didn't recognize the holiday until what History.com calls a "watershed moment" in American labor history: the 1894 Pullman Palace Car Company strike in Chicago. The strike led to sending federal troops into the city to quell rioters. Just days later, President Grover Cleveland signed a law making Labor Day, the first Monday of September, a national holiday.
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